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OMG I just had this Summer Salad with Raw Vegan Fresh Mozzarella Balls – and it was the BEST lunch ever!

Summer Salad with Fresh Vegan Baby “Mozzarella” (Bocconcini) is pure, over-the-top deliciousness!  Perfectly ripe nectarines, multi-colored cherry tomatoes, golden corn and a punchy garden chive & cilantro vinaigrette whisked up with fresh lemon & olive oil are a perfect compliment to creamy, fresh baby “Mozzarella” aka Bocconcini.

I’m telling you, this is such heaven on a plate… and the best part is it’s actually dairy free!

And just like that, as if summer couldn’t get any better, it just has 🙂 

I’d looked far and wide to no avail for a delicious raw vegan fresh mozzarella ball recipe and I finally created my own.  It’s SO simple and incredibly worth it for delicious, versatile, healthifying, dairy free, hormone free amazingness.  This pure, creamy goodness is made from raw cashews packed with copper (98% RDV per serving of cashews) phosphorus, manganese, bone-building magnesium, heart-protective monounsaturated fats, fiber and flavor galore!

And, though I tend always to think of my food as my medicine, what we eat is also the primary contributor to our external wellness as well.  Nectarines, tomatoes, corn, fresh herbs, lemon & EVOO are all packed with concentrated sources of beautifying phytonutrients such as anti-aging antioxidants, lots of vitamin A for clear glowing skin, vitamin C for collagen building power, skin plumping healthy fats, hydrating, living water, plus minerals, fiber and tons of life force power we get from beautiful, living foods.  Summer Salad with Baby Bocconcini is just as much a boon to our outward appearance as it is feast for the eyes, our internal health and tastebuds too!

 

This is my submission to The Vegetable Pallette for the Mellow Yellow challenge, to Sarah at Maison Cupcake, Helen at Fuss Free Flavours and Michelle at Utterly Scrummy, and to Ren & Elizabeth at Simple and in Season!

Recipe for Summer Salad with Raw Vegan Fresh Mozzarella Balls

(serves 4)

Ingredients

Raw Vegan Fresh Mozzarella Balls (Bocconcini)

  • 1 cup raw cashews, soaked 6 hours, drained & rinsed
  • 2 tbsp fresh lemon juiced (aprox 1/2 lemon)
  • 1/2 tsp sea salt (or more to taste up to 1 tsp)
  • a touch of stevia (I used about 1/4 tsp)
  • 1/2 to 1 tbsp (depends on humidity/seasons) filtered water

Salad

  • 2 ears fresh corn, sliced off the cob
  • 1 cup fresh cherry tomatoes, sliced in half
  • 4 ripe nectarines, cut into bite sized pieces 
  • 1/3 cup fresh chives, chopped (save a few for garnish)
  • handful fresh cilantro, chopped (save a bit for garnish)
  • 1 lemon juiced
  • 1/4 cup extra virgin olive oil
  • sea salt & fresh cracked pepper to taste
  • 1 cup raw vegan mozzarella balls (below) 

Method

Mozzarella Balls

  1. Blend 1 cup soaked cashews, 2 Tbsp lemon juice, 1/2 tsp sea salt (or up to 1 tsp to taste) and 1/2 to 1 full Tbsp filtered water (start with less as you can always add more) in a food processor until smooth, scraping down sides of bowl as necessary.
  2. Dump mozzarella cheese mixture into a container and place in freezer for 10 or 15 minutes to firm up or in fridge for a couple of hours.
  3. Once the cheese has firmed up, use a small melon ball sized spring-handled scooper to easily create tiny balls.  Place all the mozzarella balls on a plate and put back into the freezer or fridge to keep firm while creating your salad.

Salad

  1. Gently toss corn, tomatoes and nectarines together.
  2. 
Stir together chopped scallion, cilantro & lemon juice
.  Next, whisk in olive oil.
  3. Season dressing with sea salt & fresh cracked pepper to taste
.
  4. Pour 3/4 of dressing over corn/tomato/nectarine mixture and gently toss.
  5. Top salad with fresh mozzarella balls and drizzle remaining dressing over mozzarella balls. 
  6. Garnish with a bit of leftover chives & cilantro.

Enjoy!

What is your favorite raw vegan swapout?

 Do you have a recipe you’d like made over/upgraded to raw vegan?  Leave it in the comments below… I’m ready to take on the challenge!

All Love,

Juliane

 

Thank you for visiting 🙂

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In light of my recent post, Epic Thai Coconut Smoothie, (which you must try as it's over-the-top delish), I wanted to share the amazing benenfits of Coconut Oil as well as dispel some myths about oils in general.  Please enjoy this outstanding, enlightening article by the renowned doctor and best-selling author, Dr. Joseph M. Mercola:

 

"This Cooking Oil is a Powerful Virus-Destroyer and Antibiotic…

You've no doubt noticed that for about the last 60 years the majority of health care officials and the media have been telling you saturated fats are bad for your health and lead to a host of negative consequences, like elevated cholesterol, obesity, heart disease and Alzheimer's disease.

Meanwhile during this same 60 years the American levels of heart disease, obesity, elevated serum cholesterol and Alzheimer's have skyrocketed compared to our ancestors, and even compared to modern-day primitive societies using saturated fat as a dietary staple.

Did you know that multiple studies on Pacific Island populations who get 30-60% of their total caloric intact from fully saturated coconut oil have all shown nearly non-existent rates of cardiovascular disease?1

Clearly, a lot of confusion and contradictory evidence exists on the subject of saturated fats, even among health care professionals.

But I'm going to tell you something that public health officials and the media aren't telling you.

The fact is, all saturated fats are not created equal.

The operative word here is "created", because some saturated fats occur naturally, while other fats are artificially manipulated into a saturated state through the man-made process called hydrogenation.

Hydrogenation manipulates vegetable and seed oils by adding hydrogen atoms while heating the oil, producing a rancid, thickened oil that really only benefits processed food shelf life and corporate profits.

The medical and scientific communities are now fairly united in the opinion thathydrogenated vegetable and seed oils should be avoided.

These unsaturated fats, artificially manipulated into saturated fats, are also called trans fats, and no doubt you've heard about them lately. Some cities and states have now outlawed their use. There is no controversy anymore regarding the health dangers of these artificially saturated fats.

And guess what?

These are the same damaged trans fats that have been touted as "healthy" and "heart-friendly" for the last 60 years by the vegetable and seed oil interests!

But the truth finally came out. Trans fat was rebuked, debunked, and revealed as the true enemy to good health that it has always been, regardless of what the seed- and vegetable oil shills told the American public for the last half century.

Unfortunately, this rightful vilification of hydrogenated saturated fats has created a lot of confusion regarding naturally occurring saturated fats, including coconut oil.

If one form of saturated fat is bad for you, the argument goes, then all saturated fat must be bad.

Right?

Nothing could be further from the truth!

The Truth about Coconut Oil

The truth about coconut oil is obvious to anyone who has studied the health of those who live in traditional tropical cultures, where coconut has been a nutritious diet staple for thousands of years.

Back in the 1930's, a dentist named Dr. Weston Price traveled throughout the South Pacific, examining traditional diets and their effect on dental and overall health. He found that those eating diets high in coconut products were healthy and trim, despite the high fat concentration in their diet, and that heart disease was virtually non-existent.

Similarly, in 1981, researchers studied populations of two Polynesian atolls. Coconut was the chief source of caloric energy in both groups. The results, published in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition,2 demonstrated that both populations exhibited positive vascular health.

In fact, no evidence exists that the naturally occurring high saturated fat intake had any kind of harmful effect in these populations!

That's not what you expected, is it? Based on 60 years of negative public policy towards naturally occurring saturated fats, you would expect these cultures to be rife with clogged arteries, obesity and heart disease.

It may be surprising for you to realize that the naturally occurring saturated fat in coconut oil actually has some amazing health benefits, such as:

  • Promoting your heart health
  • Promoting weight loss, when needed
  • Supporting your immune system health
  • Supporting a healthy metabolism
  • Providing you with an immediate energy source
  • Keeping your skin healthy and youthful looking
  • Supporting the proper functioning of your thyroid gland

But how is this possible?

Does coconut oil have some secret ingredients not found in other saturated fats?

The answer is a resounding "yes".

Coconut Oil's Secret Ingredient

50 percent of the fat content in coconut oil is a fat rarely found in nature called lauric acid. If you're a frequent reader of my newsletter you already know that I consider lauric acid a "miracle" ingredient because of its unique health promoting properties.

Your body converts lauric acid into monolaurin, which has anti-viral, anti-bacterial and anti-protozoa properties.

Monolaurin is a monoglyceride which can actually destroy lipid coated viruses such as:

  • HIV, herpes
  • Measles
  • Influenza virus
  • Various pathogenic bacteria
  • Protozoa such as giardia lamblia.

Lauric acid is a powerful virus and gram-negative bacteria destroyer, and coconut oil contains the most lauric acid of any substance on earth!

Capric acid, another coconut fatty acid present in smaller amounts, has also been added to the list of coconut's antimicrobial components.

This is one of the key reasons you should consider consuming coconut oil, because there aren't many sources of monolaurin in our diet. But the health benefits of coconut oil don't stop there.

The Benefits of Medium-Chain Fatty Acids

Coconut oil is about 2/3 medium-chain fatty acids (MCFAs), also called medium-chain triglycerides or MCTs. These types of fatty acids produce a whole host of health benefits.

Coconut oil is nature's richest source of these healthy MCFAs.

By contrast, most common vegetable or seed oils are comprised of long chain fatty acids (LCFAs), also known as long-chain triglycerides or LCTs.

Let me tell you why these long-chain fatty acids are not as healthy for you as the MCFAs found in coconut oil.

  • LCFAs are difficult for your body to break down — they require special enzymes for digestion.
  • LCFAs put more strain on your pancreas, liver and your entire digestive system.
  • LCFAs are predominantly stored in your body as fat.
  • LCFAs can be deposited within your arteries in lipid forms such as cholesterol.
  • In contrast to LFCAs, the MCFAs found in coconut oil have many health benefits, including the following beneficial qualities:
  • MCFAs are smaller. They permeate cell membranes easily, and do not require special enzymes to be utilized effectively by your body.
  • MCFAs are easily digested, thus putting less strain on your digestive system.
  • MCFAs are sent directly to your liver, where they are immediately converted into energy rather than being stored as fat.
  • MCFAs actually help stimulate your body's metabolism, leading to weight loss.

Coconut Oil Helps Fight Diabetes

Your body sends medium-chain fatty acids directly to your liver to use as energy. This makes coconut oil a powerful source of instant energy to your body, a function usually served in the diet by simple carbohydrates.

But although coconut oil and simple carbohydrates share the ability to deliver quick energy to your body, they differ in one crucial respect.

Coconut oil does not produce an insulin spike in your bloodstream. You read that correctly, Coconut oil acts on your body like a carbohydrate, without any of the debilitating insulin-related effects associated with long-term high carbohydrate consumption!

Diabetics and those with pre-diabetes conditions (an exploding health epidemic in America), should immediately realize the benefit of a fast acting energy source that doesn't produce an insulin spike in your body. In fact, coconut oil added to the diets of diabetics and pre-diabetics has actually been shown to help stabilize weight gain, which can dramatically decrease your likelihood of getting adult onset type-2 Diabetes.

 

Did You Know?

coconut uses infographic

 

Cococut Oil, the Friend to Athletes and Dieters

If you live in the United States, you have an almost 70 percent chance of being overweight.

And, by now, I'm sure you're well aware that obesity affects your quality of life and is linked to many health concerns.

One of the best benefits of coconut oil lies in its ability to help stimulate your metabolism.

Back in the 1940s, farmers found out about this effect by accident when they tried using inexpensive coconut oil to fatten their livestock.

It didn't work!

Instead, coconut oil made the animals lean, active and hungry.

However, many animal and human research studies have demonstrated that replacing LCFAs with MCFAs results in both decreased body weight and reduced fat deposition.

In fact, the ability of MCFAs to be easily digested, to help stimulate the metabolism and be turned into energy has entered the sports arena. Several studies have now shown that MCFAs can enhance physical or athletic performance.

Additionally, research has demonstrated that, due to its metabolic effect, coconut oil increases the activity of the thyroid. And you've probably heard that a sluggish thyroid is one reason why some people are unable to lose weight, no matter what they do.

Besides weight loss, there are other advantages to boosting your metabolic rate. Your healing process accelerates. Cell regeneration increases to replace old cells, and your immune system functions better overall.

Coconut Oil on Your Skin

Besides the mounting medical and scientific evidence that coconut oil has powerful positive health benefits when eaten, it has also been used for decades by professional massage therapists to knead away tight stressed muscles.

However, you don't have to be a professional massage therapist to gain the skin and tissue support benefits of coconut oil. Just use coconut oil as you would any lotion.

Coconut oil is actually ideal for skin care. It helps protect your skin from the aging effects of free radicals, and can help improve the appearance of skin with its anti-aging benefits.

In fact, physiologist and biochemist Ray Peat, Ph.D. considers coconut oil an antioxidant, due to its stability and resistance to oxidation and free radical formation. Plus, he believes it reduces our need for the antioxidant protection of vitamin E.

Like Dr. Peat, many experts believe coconut oil may help restore more youthful-looking skin. When coconut oil is absorbed into your skin and connective tissues, it helps to reduce the appearance of fine lines and wrinkles by helping to keep your connective tissues strong and supple, and aids in exfoliating the outer layer of dead skin cells, making your skin smoother.

Coconut Oil and Your Heart

Heart disease is the number one cause of death in the U.S. And heart disease is often a silent killer. The first sign of cardiovascular disease is commonly a heart attack, and sadly, over one third of heart attacks are fatal.

And despite the propaganda, the truth is this: it is UNSATURATED fats that are primarily involved in heart disease, not the naturally occurring saturated fats, as you have been led to believe.14

Plus, the polyunsaturated fats in vegetable and seed oils encourage the formation of blood clots by increasing platelet stickiness. Coconut oil helps to promote normal platelet function.

Coconut Oil in Your Kitchen

I only use two oils in my food preparation.

The first, extra-virgin olive oil, is a better monounsaturated fat that works great as a salad dressing.

However, it should not be used for cooking. Due to its chemical structure, heat makes it susceptible to oxidative damage.

And polyunsaturated fats, which include common vegetable oils such as corn, soy, safflower, sunflower and canola, are absolutely the worst oils to use in cooking. These omega-6 oils are highly susceptible to heat damage because of their double bonds.

I strongly urge you to throw out those omega-6 vegetable oils in your cabinets.

Why?

Reason # 1: Most people believe that frying creates trans-fat. That is not the major problem, in my opinion. Although some are created, they are relatively minor. There are FAR more toxic chemicals produced by frying omega-6 oils than trans-fat.

Frying destroys the antioxidants in oil and as a result oxidizes the oil. This causes cross-linking, cyclization, double-bond shifts, fragmentation and polymerization of oils that cause far more damage than trans-fat.

Reason # 2: Most of the vegetable oils are GMO. This would include over 90 percent of the soy, corn and canola oils.

Reason # 3: Vegetable oils contribute to the overabundance of damaged omega-6 fats in your diet, which creates an imbalance in the ratio of omega-6 to omega-3. As you know from my extensive writing on this subject, I believe that excessive consumption of damaged omega-6 fats contributes to many health concerns.

They are all highly processed and consumed in amounts that are about 100 times more than our ancestors did a century ago. This causes them to distort the sensitive omega-6/omega-3 ratio which controls many delicate biochemical pathways which results in accelerating many chronic degenerative diseases.

There is only one oil that is stable enough to resist mild heat-induced damage, while it also helps you promote heart health and even supports weight loss and thyroid function — coconut oil.

So, whenever you need an oil to cook with, use coconut oil instead of butter, olive oil, vegetable oil, margarine, or any other type of oil called for in recipes. Even though I don't fully recommend frying foods, if you must fry, by all means use coconut oil — it's your smartest choice.

 

Coconut Oil Safety

The medium-chain fats in coconut oil are considered so nutritious that they are used in baby formulas, in hospitals to feed the critically ill, those on tube feeding, and those with digestive problems. Coconut oil has even been used successfully by doctors in treating aluminum poisoning.15

Coconut oil is exceptionally helpful for pregnant women, nursing moms, the elderly, those concerned about digestive health, athletes (even weekend warriors), and those of you who just want to enhance your overall health."

To learn more about the author of this article, Dr. Joseph M. Mercola, visit his excellent website and online store at  www.Mercola.com.

  

Meantime, enjoy the below genius ways to incorporate Coconut Oil in your life provided by Thank Your Skin and give them a follow for lots more helpful tips and tricks!


10 Genius Ways To Use Coconut Oil For Healthy Skin

What is your favorite oil to use in food preparations?  

Do you have other favorite oils?  For example, I love Pomegranate Oil as an after bath moisturizer & Baobab Oil mixed into my nighttime facial moisturizer.

 

If you liked this post, say thanks by sharing. 

IMG_4637Green Tomato Pave with Pistachio Relish & Sweet Tomato Fondue

Admittadly, I considered posting only the pictures of this luscious dish. It was that delicious, fresh and beautiful. Couldn't it possibly stand alone with no words to accompany?

I'm having SO much fun cooking Raw Vegan Cuisine, learning a ton, working with new ingredients, techniques and tools, making many ingredients by hand… and continuing to feel amazing changes in my spiritual, mental and physical well being.

 Green Tomato Pave with Pistachio Relish & Sweet Tomato Fondue is a recipe by Matthew Kenney, James Beard Award nominated chef and co-founder of the upscale, sexy, award winning raw vegan cuisine restaurant in New York City, Pure Food & Wine.  This dish encapsulates what I love about Raw Cuisine: light, intoxicatingly fresh ingredients, bursting with delicious flavors.  To be absolutely cliche, it's summertime on a plate.

Enjoy:-)

IMG_4642

Green Tomato Pave with Pistachio Relish & Sweet Tomato Fondue

 

Green Tomato Pave with Pistachio Relish & Sweet Tomato Fondue (Serves 4-6)

Ingredients:

TOMATOES

  • 8 large green tomatoes (green tomatoes are firm & slice easily, I picked a couple with spots of pink blush on the skins, lo & behold they were both beautiful green and red in the centers!)

SWEET TOMATO FONDUE 

  • 1/4 cup olive oil
  • 3 cups chopped tomatoes (heirloom if possible)
  • 1/4 cup agave
  • 2 tablespoons fresh lemon juice
  • 2 teaspoons himalayan or celtic sea salt
  • fresh ground pepper to taste
  • 1/4 cup bail, julienned, plus more for garnish

PISTACHIO RELISH

  • 1 cup pistachios
  • 1/4 cup fresh lemon juice
  • 1/4 cup olive oil
  • 1 teaspoon himalayan or celtic sea salt
  • freshly ground pepper

Method:

TOMATOES Thinly slice tomatoes on a mandoline into 1/4 inch slices.

SWEET TOMATO FONDUE Blend all ingredients except basil in a high-speed blender until smooth. Stir in basil.

PISTACHIO RELISH Pulse all ingredients in a high-speed blender until well combined but still chunky. Season with salt and pepper to taste.

FINISH Alternate layering 3 to 4 tomatoes with Pistachio Relish. Drizzle with Sweet Tomato Fondue, serving remaining Fondue in small bowls alongside with soup spoons. Garnish with more Pistachio Relish and a few pieces of fresh basil. Serve immediately.

Enjoy!

IMG_4643

Green Tomato Pave with Pistachio Relish & Sweet Tomato Fondue

 

You may also enjoy: First Spring Harvest… a cool, zippy refrigerator snack!

IMG_2890
Fettuccini with Toasted Walnuts, Parsley & Parmigiano Reggiano 

Fettuccini with Toasted Walnuts, Parsley & Parmigiano Reggiano is one of my favorite go-to dinners when I'm short on time and in need of wholesome nutrition.  

Essentially a deconstructed pesto, this satisfying meal is packed with antioxidant rich whole wheat pasta, fresh Italian parsley, a punch of garlic and the delicious, bacony crunch of toasted walnuts all topped with authentic Parmigiano Reggiano.

Total perfection in every bite!

*As always, using the highest quality ingredients possible is key.  Those few extra dollars spent stocking your kitchen with the freshest, organic ingredients available will train your taste buds away from low quality convenience foods which are usually quite pricey in comparison.

IMG_2882
Fettuccini with Toasted Walnuts, Parsley & Parmigiano Reggiano


Fettuccini with Toasted Walnuts, Parsley & Parmigiano Reggiano

Ingredients:

  • 12 oz high quality Italian whole wheat fettuccini (whole wheat pasta can be delicious- my two favorites: Bionaturae & Delallo) Update* If you're gluten free, use Quinoa fettuccini– my new Fav!
  • 1/4 cup best quality extra virgin olive oil Update* I would now use just a tablespoon of olive oil- even more likely I'd sub coconut oil which has amazing health and beuty benefits including balancing the thyroid. 
  • 2/3 cup + a bit extra reserved for garnishing, organic walnuts, coarsley chopped & toasted (I toast mine on a piece of tin foil in my toaster oven til fragrant & browned) Update* Tho toasted nuts are delish, I've since learned it turns their fats into harmful fats:-( However, my new recommendation, sprouted, rehydrated walnuts are even MORE delish- and even healthier than the raw version!
  • 5 cloves garlic
  • 1/2 cup low-sodium chicken or vegetable stock
  • 1/2 cup chopped flat leaf Italian parsley + extra reserved for garnishing
  • 3/4 cup freshly grated Parmigiano Reggiano (Update* my home-made recipe for vegan Parmigiano Reggiano coming soon! Meantime, substitute vegan parmigiano)
  • 1/2 teaspoon sea salt
  • 1/2 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper

Method

  1. Prepare pasta al dente or according to package directions and drain into a colander. Set aside.
  2. Heat the olive oil in the pasta pot over low heat. Add the garlic and stir just til softened & fragrant- 2-3 minutes. 
  3. Return pasta to the pot.  Add the broth, walnuts, chopped parsley and sea salt and pepper. Toss everything together to combine then cook over low heat for 1 to 2 minutes. 
  4. Add the grated Parmigano and toss once more. 
  5. Serve immediately in pasta bowls, garnishing the tops of each with the remaining reserved toasted walnuts and chopped parsley.

Update* If you practice proper Food Combining as I do now, substitute a plant based pasta such as kelp noodles, spiralized yellow squash or Shiratake Noodles so you're not combining a protein (nuts) and a carb (pasta) which is very difficult to digest.

Enjoy!

Recipe  Tested & Approved from Ellie Krieger